Meta Launches Paid Facebook and Instagram Plans for $3.99


TL;DR

  • Launch Pricing: Meta has rolled out Facebook Plus and Instagram Plus at $3.99 per month, while WhatsApp Plus is listed at $2.99.
  • App Split: Facebook and Instagram focus on profile and Story extras, while WhatsApp Plus centers on themes, stickers, ringtones, and pinned chats.
  • Roadmap Test: Meta is using the launch to test separate subscriptions before expanding Meta One, business tools, and paid Meta AI tiers.

Meta has launched new Plus subscriptions worldwide across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. A day earlier, the Facebook Plus and Instagram Plus plans were listed at $3.99 each, while WhatsApp Plus was listed at $2.99. Meta head of product Naomi Gleit described the paid tiers as ways to express and connect across Meta’s apps, with more features to come.

Meta moved from outlining a subscription test in January to selling live paid add-ons across its biggest social apps. Separate product tracks keep Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp from being folded into one bundle on day one. Meta can now see which social and messaging perks users may pay for before any broader package is defined.

Users who want premium features on both Facebook and Instagram still need separate subscriptions for each app instead of buying one shared pass. Separate tiers span Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp, but they do not unlock a universal paid layer across the three services. Facebook and Instagram stay closest to profile and audience tools, while WhatsApp is being positioned as a separate messaging add-on with its own pricing and perks.

What Users Get

Profile customization, Story insights, and super reactions are the clearest perks for Instagram Plus and Facebook Plus. Story insights are audience metrics for stories, while super reactions are paid animated replies rather than standard reactions. WhatsApp heads in a different direction by focusing on personalization and chat management instead of creator-style features.

The global rollout still does not come with a full feature list. Users now know the starting prices and the broad feature buckets, but they still lack a clear app-by-app matrix for which perks arrive first in which markets. Separate subscriptions are harder to judge without a plain list of what changes inside each product.

 

Instagram and Facebook are the easier consumer pitch because their extras tie directly to posting identity and audience feedback. WhatsApp’s package is more utility driven, with themes, extra pinned chats, stickers, and ringtones aimed at heavier messaging use. Meta is treating those habits as separate premium lanes instead of forcing every service into the same paid template.